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[VIDEO] Ibrahim Zadran dedicates his Man of the Match award to Afghan refugees who have been deported from Pakistan

At least 44,000 Afghans approved for relocation to Western nations following the Taliban’s return to power are still waiting in limbo in Pakistan, the Foreign Office (FO) said on Thursday

In the days after the Nato-backed government collapsed in August 2021, more than 120,000 people, mostly Afghans, were airlifted from Kabul in a chaotic evacuation.

Hundreds of thousands more Afghans have fled Taliban rule since then, with many promised new lives in the nations involved in their country’s 20-year occupation.

FO spokeswoman Mumtaz Zahra Baloch said that three years after the Taliban takeover, there were still 25,000 Afghans approved for relocation to the US living in Pakistan.

A further 9,000 Afghans resident in Pakistan have been accepted by Australia, as have 6,000 by Canada, 3,000 by Germany, and more than 1,000 by Britain — all yet to be relocated.

“We have urged them to expedite the approval and visa issuance process for these countries, for these individuals, so that they are relocated as early as possible,” Baloch told reporters at a weekly press briefing.

Most countries shut their Afghan embassies as Kabul fell, and as a result, many parked Afghan migrants in Pakistan while their Islamabad embassies processed their cases.

Many of the Afghans who were promised relocation were involved in the foreign-backed government and are fearful of reprisals by Taliban authorities.

On Tuesday, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif pressed the UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi over the backlog of Afghans awaiting relocation, as well as the large numbers of refugees who have arrived with no plans for onward travel.

According to a statement released by his office, PM Shehbaz told Grandi that “the international community must recognise the burden being shouldered by Pakistan while hosting such a large refugee population, and demonstrate collective responsibility.”

Some 600,000 Afghans have travelled to Pakistan since the Taliban took over and implemented their austere version of Islam.

Millions more came in the four decades before that, fleeing successive conflicts, including the Soviet invasion, a civil war and the post-9/11 US-led occupation.

Since last year, however, Islamabad has waged a campaign to evict huge numbers of undocumented Afghans, as relations with Kabul soured over security.

More than half a million have crossed back into Afghanistan, fearing arrest. On Wednesday, the federal cabinet said it would extend the right of registered Afghan refugees to stay for another year — but continue its push to send those without papers back home.

Source: Dawn News
 
NADRA assistant director arrested for issuing Pakistani ID to Afghans

The Federal Investigation Agency’s (FIA) Anti-Human Trafficking Circle in Karachi executed the operation that led to the arrest of the individual.

According to the FIA spokesperson, the arrested individual Nadeem Ali, employed at NARDA as assistant director, collaborated with his colleagues to issue these identity cards illegally.

The arrested officer was serving at the NADRA office located at Hospital Chowrangi in Karachi. While the primary suspect has been apprehended, the FIA is continuing raids to capture other individuals involved in the illegal activities.

Sources within the FIA have indicated that the investigation is in its final stages, with the identification of other responsible NADRA officials already accomplished.

 
US envoy appreciates Pakistan’s decision to extend Afghan refugees’ stay

United States Ambassador to Pakistan Donald Blome has appreciated Pakistan’s decision to extend the stay of registered Afghan refugees by a year, a statement from the US embassy in Pakistan said on Friday.

A large number of Afghan immigrants, with an estimated 1.7m undocumented as of October 2023, reside in Pakistan. Last October, the caretaker government had announced the repatriation of all illegal foreigners citing security concerns. The decision was alleged to be meant for Afghan refugees, a charge that was denied by officials.

Pakistan launched the first round of deportation in November last year, and according to state-run Radio Pakistan, 675,190 Afghans have returned to their country as of August 4 under the drive.

While the government had decided to begin the second round of repatriation of holders of Afghan Citizenship Cards (ACC), it last month granted 1.45 million Afghan refugees another year, extending their permitted stay in Pakistan till June 30, 2025.

According to the US Mission Spokesperson Jonathan Lalley, Blome expressed the sentiments in a meeting today with Minister of States and Frontier Regions Amir Muqam in Islamabad.

While thanking Muqam for Pakistan’s “long history of hosting Afghan refugees”, Blome also reaffirmed the US’s commitment to working with Pakistan to “assist Afghan refugees and Pakistani community members in areas hosting refugees”.

Blome “expressed appreciation for Pakistan’s recent decision to extend the validity of refugee Proof of Registration cards”, Lalley’s statement said.

PoR is a critical identity document held by registered Afghan refugees.

Lalley added that Blome also thanked Pakistan for the “positive steps taken to address protection concerns, and for our countries’ continued cooperation to facilitate the safe, efficient resettlement of eligible Afghans” to the US.

The decision to extend the refugees’ stay had come a day after Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif met with Commissioner of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Filippo Grandi, who was visiting Pakistan.

PM Shehbaz had urged the international community to recognise the “burden of Afghan refugees” being shouldered by Pakistan and demonstrate “collective responsibility” to deal with the issue. Grandi had also met with Muqam and Dar.

DAWN NEWS
 

FIA detains six Afghan nationals over Pakistani passport fraud​


Six Afghan nationals were arrested at the Pak-Afghan Torkham border crossing for fraudulently obtaining Pakistani passports.

The individuals apprehended by the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) and were presented in court after completing a one-day physical remand.

The court ordered their transfer to jail on judicial remand.

According to the FIA, the suspects were found in possession of Pakistani Form-B, passports, and other documents.

An agent named Qari Hafiz in Quetta was reportedly responsible for acquiring the passports for them.

The suspects were attempting to travel to Saudi Arabia using the Pakistani passports. The FIA has stated that those responsible for facilitating the passport acquisition will be arrested soon.

Earlier on July 12, the Federal Investigation Agency (FIA) arrested two key members of a gang involved in a massive visa fraud scheme that deceived over 350 citizens.

According to an FIA spokesperson, the suspects, identified as Ghulam Murtaza and Anjum Javed, were apprehended during a raid in Islamabad.

Speaking at a ceremony for travel and tour operators on Wednesday, Shah stated, "We have initiated actions against companies and travel agencies involved in human smuggling, fake passports, and fake visas".

 

No Afghan national will stay in Islamabad without NOC after Dec 31, says Naqvi​


Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi said on Wednesday Afghan nationals would not be allowed to stay in the Islamabad Capital Territory (ICT) without having proper permission from authorities after Dec 31, 2024.

The minister made the announcement while speaking to media in the federal capital.

He said any Afghan citizen, who intends to stay in ICT after December this year, would have to obtain a No Objection Certificate (NOC) from the Deputy Commissioner Office.

Responding to a question, the minister said most roads had been opened and routine life in Islamabad restored.

Naqvi rejected the ongoing propaganda of killings during the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) protest in Islamabad, saying no policeman was equipped with a pistol.

“I have been asking to share the names of those killed in the protests but there is no response from the other side,” he said.

They should share evidence, if any, of deaths during protest, he said.

The minister said he would share the data of the tear gas shells fired by the protesters on law enforcers. “We are ready if they [PTI] want to come again,” he dared PTI.

Islamabad Chief Commissioner Muhammad Ali Randhawa has warned that no one will be allowed to challenge the writ of the state and law.

Addressing a joint news conference, Islamabad IGP Ali Nasir Rizvi and Chief Commissioner Randhawa announced that all routes of the federal capital Islamabad had been cleared.

They disclosed that demonstrators including Afghan nationals staged a protest in the capital despite the fact that the Belarusian delegation was visiting Pakistan.

The chief commissioner revealed that Afghan nationals were apprehended and said the state writ must be maintained. He said data of Afghan nationals would be verified and only those possessing the NOCs would be allowed to live in the federal capital.

They mentioned that they offered the PTI to stage a protest at Sangjani and a mechanism of filing an application to the district administration had to be considered for a peaceful protest.

They stated that the PTI insisted on protesting at D-Chowk where protesters were carrying weapons.

The IGP and the chief commissioner stated that tear gas shells and bullets were fired on the police and Rangers personnel, green belts and trees burnt, CCTV cameras broken and metro bus stations vandalised.

He said more than 200 vehicles were impounded and weapons of different sorts including pistols and Kalashnikovs were recovered from the protesters.

The IGP said search operation was still continuing and warned that terrorism would not be allowed under the guise of protest.

“As many as 954 miscreants were arrested during last three days,” said IG Islamabad Ali Nasir Rizvi.

There was a clear distinction between protest and terrorism but how could this be a peaceful protest where police and Rangers were attacked, he added.

 
PHC bars deportation of Afghan musicians seeking asylum

According to reports, Justice Waqar Ahmed authored the concise decision, directing the federal government to appoint an officer to review asylum applications and make a decision within two months.

The court instructed that Afghan musicians must not be expelled from the country for at least two months. The Ministry of Interior has been asked to allow the musicians to remain in Pakistan during this period.

Until the government concludes the cases, no strict action is to be taken against the musicians, the court’s decision emphasised.

Pakistan temporarily halted the repatriation of illegal immigrants, including Afghan refugees, following a request from the United Nations in July 2024.

the decision came after the recent visit of UNHCR High Commissioner Filippo Grandi to Pakistan.

During his visit, Grandi met with Afghan refugees in Peshawar and Haripur and held talks with Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar, and other high-ranking officials.

The UNHCR chief requested the Pakistani government to suspend the repatriation of illegal immigrants, citing humanitarian concerns.

Prior to this decision, repatriation of illegal Afghan nationals continued as 620,981 Afghans have returned to their country till June 22.

Between 11th to 21st of this month, total 13,815 Afghans returned to their country including 5,014 men, 4,087 women and 4,714 children.

It is pertinent to mention here that the apex committee of the National Action Plan (NAP) in a meeting on October 3, 2023, chaired by the then-caretaker PM Anwaarul Haq Kakar gave a deadline to all foreign nationals living illegally in the country until October 31 to leave voluntarily or face deportation.

Since the expiry of the deadline over 500,000 illegal Afghans have returned to their homeland via the Torkham and Chaman borders.

 
Pakistan declines Afghanistan's request to extend stay of illegal Afghans

Pakistan has turned down the Afghan government’s request to extend the stay of Afghan nationals residing illegally in Islamabad and Rawalpindi, The News reported on Thursday.

These individuals were instructed last year to leave the country by February 28, 2025, giving them only seven days to stay in the twin cities.

According to sources, security agencies have compiled lists of illegal Afghan residents, including information on their residences and locations.

The Afghan nationals, who have documents to go to another country, can stay here till March 31 this year. After this date, they will also have to leave Pakistan.

The Afghans, who have a valid Pakistani visa for the period for which it has been issued, can continue to stay till that time.

Government sources told The News on Wednesday the decision to expel Afghan nationals has become inevitable because of the security situation and sensitivity of the twin cities.


 
Kick all the Afghans back to the stone age. Afganistan!

These people are pretty much shameless. Pakistan has looked after them decade upon decade and in return, Terrorism upon terrorism!
 
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Pakistan declines Afghanistan's request to extend stay of illegal Afghans

Pakistan has turned down the Afghan government’s request to extend the stay of Afghan nationals residing illegally in Islamabad and Rawalpindi, The News reported on Thursday.

These individuals were instructed last year to leave the country by February 28, 2025, giving them only seven days to stay in the twin cities.

According to sources, security agencies have compiled lists of illegal Afghan residents, including information on their residences and locations.

The Afghan nationals, who have documents to go to another country, can stay here till March 31 this year. After this date, they will also have to leave Pakistan.

The Afghans, who have a valid Pakistani visa for the period for which it has been issued, can continue to stay till that time.

Government sources told The News on Wednesday the decision to expel Afghan nationals has become inevitable because of the security situation and sensitivity of the twin cities.


Globalization has massively failed. Even Muslims of various nationalities can’t stay together .

Refugees getting kicked out left and right.
 
Globalization has massively failed. Even Muslims of various nationalities can’t stay together .

Refugees getting kicked out left and right.
Or do u think ummah failed in the face of economics. Basically Muslims wants everyone to support their group by staying in with in their boundaries.
 
I never understood why Afghanis dont cry when Iranis deport them, kick them and even kill them. They are 10000x more brutal but i hear zero noise on that. Its crazy. Mayber Zadran can dedicate his next MoM on refugees being kicked out from Iran.
 
Afghan refugees living in Balochistan told to leave Pakistan by March 31

Afghan refugees living in Dalbandin, Chaghi, Nokundi and Taftan in western Balochistan have been ordered to leave Pakistan by March 31, 2025; or otherwise they will be forcibly evicted from there.

According to media reports, government of Pakistan had drafted a three-stage repatriation plan for Afghan refugees promised resettlement by the US, calling on foreign missions to coordinate the relocation of Afghan nationals out of Islamabad and Rawalpindi by March 31.

If they’re not removed by that date, they will be “repatriated to Afghanistan”, said the drafted Pakistani plan.

When Afghanistan fell to the Taliban in 2021, hundreds of thousands of refugees fled across the border to Pakistan, seeking safety away from the group.

Afghan nationals who had worked with the United States or NATO forces were particularly fearful of reprisals from the Taliban.

Promised resettlement in the US, many travelled to Pakistan to await American visas.

Now they fear they’ll be deported back to Afghanistan, following US President Donald Trump’s order to suspend the US Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP), effectively locking out refugees worldwide who had been on a pathway to US resettlement.

Soon after the executive order was signed, Pakistan’s Prime Minister’s Office drafted a three-stage repatriation plan for “Afghan nationals bound for third country resettlement.”

The document calls for foreign missions to coordinate the relocation of Afghan nationals out of Islamabad and its twin city of Rawalpindi by March 31, 2025. If they’re not removed by that date, they will be “repatriated to Afghanistan.”

 

Govt advises Afghan Citizen Card holders to leave by March 31​


The government announced on Friday that it will repatriate Afghan Citizen Card (ACC) holders as part of its ongoing Illegal Foreigners Repatriation Programme (IFRP), which began on November 1, 2023.

In a statement, authorities advised all illegal foreign nationals, including ACC holders, to leave Pakistan voluntarily by March 31. Deportation procedures will commence from April 1 for those who fail to comply.

The government stated that the repatriation process will be conducted in a humane manner, ensuring the dignified return of all affected individuals.

"Sufficient time has been granted for a voluntary return," the statement read, adding, "Arrangements for food and healthcare have also been made for returning foreign nationals."

Pakistan has long been a host to Afghan refugees and continues to uphold its international responsibilities. However, officials reiterated that those wishing to remain in the country must meet legal requirements and abide by Pakistan's constitution.

Under the IFRP, all undocumented foreigners, including Afghans, are being repatriated. Afghan nationals sponsored by European or other foreign countries will not be deported for now, but if their resettlement plans are not finalised soon, they too could face deportation, according to sources from the Ministry of Interior.

As part of the programme, 781 Afghan nationals have already been repatriated from Islamabad via the Torkham border.

 
Arrangements finalised to detain, deport Afghans as deadline nears

The government has made arrangements to detain and expel a certain category of Afghan citizens after the March 31 deadline for their voluntary return to Afghanistan.

Earlier this year, the government ordered the Afghan Citizen Card (ACC) holders to leave Pakistan by the end of March or face deportation passes.

The government has decided to move forward with the repatriation despite requests by global human rights bodies to reconsider the decision.

A high-level meeting was held on Friday, three days before the deadline, to review arrangements to repatriate ACC holders after the March 31 deadline.

The meeting, chaired by Interior Minister Mohsin Naqvi, was informed by officials that all arrangements have been completed to send ACC holders back to Afghanistan.

The officials said that holding centres have been set up to detain Afghan citizens before their deportation, with food and healthcare facilities arranged at the facilities.

Mr Naqvi said the federal government was coordinating with the provinces regarding the repatriation process. He said Islamabad would provide full support to the provinces for the repatriation process.

The meeting decided that Minister of State for Interior Talal Chaudhry would visit the provinces to resolve any issues during the repatriation process.

Mr Naqvi also directed the authorities to treat foreign nationals respectfully during the repatriation process.

A door-to-door awareness campaign about the repatriation was underway and the mapping of ACC holders had also been completed, the meeting was told.

ACC is an identification document issued to registered Afghan nationals by Nadra.

According to the UN’s International Organisation for Migration, ACC gives temporary legal status to Afghans during their stay in Pakistan. However, the federal government makes the decision on the duration for which the ACC would remain valid.

The meeting was attended by Mr Chaudhry; federal secretaries for interior and Kashmir affairs, Gilgit-Baltistan and states and frontier regions; chief secretaries and inspectors general of police of all provinces; FIA director general, police chief and deputy commissioner of Islamabad; National Action Plan coordinator; and representatives from the ministry of foreign affairs and law and security agencies.

Imprisonment and fine

A government official told Dawn that crackdowns would be launched after the deadline against ACC holders across the country.

He said citizens renting their properties to illegal Afghan nationals will also face consequences.

Search operations would be conducted to track illegal Afghans and their biometric records would be maintained in official records to bar their entry into the country in future.

The identity and travel documents fraudulently obtained by Afghan nations will be cancelled. They will also face imprisonment and fines, along with their abettors, added the official, who wished not to be named.

Committee formed

The meeting also decided to form a committee to consider the recommendation of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Chief Minister Ali Amin Gandapur for talks with the Afghan Taliban on terrorism.

Mr Gandapur had requested the federal government to formally entrust him the responsibility of holding talks with the Afghan government.

He had also submitted a proposed peace plan to the ministries of interior and foreign affairs.

Reaction from rights bodies

The repatriation of ACC holders was part of the second phase of the Illegal Foreigners Repatriation Programme, which started in November 2023.

The move was announced in a government notification dated January 29.

The federal government also decided to relocate Afghan nationals — including those with UNHCR-issued Proof of Registration (PoR) cards — out of Islamabad and Rawalpindi by March 31.

The deportation plan has been severely criticised by global human rights bodies.

They said the deadline has left hundreds of thousands of Afghans in an increasingly precarious and vulnerable position.

Earlier this week, Amnesty International deplored the treatment of Afghan migrants by Pakistani authorities, saying thousands were being “harassed, unlawfully detained, and forced to leave the country”.

“The Pakistani government’s plans to arbitrarily and forcibly expel Afghan nationals, including refugees and asylum seekers, as part of the opaque ‘Illegal Foreigners Repatriation Plan’ will only add to their plight”, Amnesty International said in a statement on Wednesday.

The rights body called the March 31 deadline “unyielding and cruel”, which shows “little respect for international human rights law, particularly the principle of non-refoulement”.

However, the Foreign Office has called claims about the mistreatment of Afghans “misplaced”.

It said that Pakistan had hosted millions of Afghans for decades with respect and dignity even with “very little international support”.

DAWN NEWS
 
All things aside, Pakistan govt. should negotiate with Taliban about eradicating Polio among their population.
A major landmark of humanity is simply stuck for a decade just because of Pakistan and Afghanistan.
 
Afghan Taliban govt urges Pakistan not to start deportation of refugees as deadline expires

The Afghan interim government under the Taliban on Tuesday called upon Islamabad not to start deportation of Afghan nationals, as the deadline for Afghan Citizenship Card (ACC) holders to voluntarily leave Pakistan expired yesterday.

The interior ministry, in a statement on March 6, had stated “All illegal foreigners and ACC holders are advised to leave the country voluntarily before 31 March 2025; thereafter, deportation will commence wef 1 April 2025.”

A report published in state-run Radio Pakistan today said that “strict legal action would now be initiated against the concerned individuals” since the specified date has passed.

UNHCR Representative to Pakistan Philippa Candler has said Pakistan hosts 1.52 million registered Afghan refugees and asylum-seekers, an estimated 800,000 Afghan citizenship holders, along with others living in the country without official recognition.

“Notably, Pakistan has announced a renewed crackdown, stating that it will deport individuals without legal residence permits, even as valid cardholders face uncertainty,” an Afghan government statement said on April 1st, according to the Afghan official Bakhtar news agency.

Afghan Minister of Refugees and Repatriation, Mawlavi Abdul Kabir, has urged neighbouring countries (Pakistan and Iran) to halt planned deportations and allow Afghans to return home voluntarily.

“He emphasised the importance of humane treatment for refugees, especially in light of reports of mistreatment of Afghans by border nations, including instances where individuals holding legal visas were also deported,” Bakhtar reported.

Senior officials in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa have recommended to the federal government to postpone the repatriation process until April 10 in view of the Eid holidays. There has been no indication from the interior ministry that this suggestion would be accepted.

Jawad Shinwari, a correspondent in Khyber tribal district told Dawn.com that refugee camps established by authorities at Landi Kotal are currently closed and there was no movement as of this afternoon.

A meeting of the Provincial Steering Committee on Illegal Foreigners’ Repatriation plan (ACC holders) was briefed on the repatriation process and requirements, according to the minutes seen by Dawn.com.

“All the participants of the meeting unanimously agreed on the proposal that repatriation/deportation of ACC holders may be started from 10 April, 2025 instead of 1 April 2025 due to Eidul Fitr Holidays,” according to the minutes of the March 17 meeting.

The meeting, presided over by the additional chief secretary, home and TAs Department, also discussed funding that will be required for the repatriation process.

“Repatriation/deportation of ACC holders comes under the domain of the federal government. Therefore the provincial government, KP may be granted funds/financial support for the repatriation of ACC holders,” according to the minutes.

The meeting decided that the home department will move a summary to the KP chief minister for clarity on repatriation.

There is no word from the KP and federal governments whether the funding issue has been resolved.

The Interior Ministry says the Illegal Foreigners Repatriation Program (IFRP) is being implemented from 1 November 2023. “In continuation to the Government’s decision to repatriate all illegal foreigners, national leadership has now decided to also repatriate ACC holders,” the March 6 statement had stated.

Under the IFRP, over 700,000 undocumented Afghans have already left Pakistan since the process was launched in Nov 2023.

Acting Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi, in a meeting with Pakistan’s Special Representative for Afghanistan Mohammad Sadiq in Kabul on March 22, had asked Pakistan to give more time to the ACC holders as repatriation of so many people could create difficulties for his government.

DAWN NEWS
 
Deportations begin today amid ‘deadline extension’ confusion

The second phase of sending back Afghan refugees is set to begin in earnest from today (Thursday) following the expiration of a government deadline for Afghan Citizen Card (ACC) holders to leave the country voluntarily.

The government had set March 31 as the last date for ACC holders to return to their country and refused to budge despite calls from the international community to extend the deadline.

“Although the deadline was March 31, the provincial government extended it till April 2 keeping in view Eidul Fitr. Now, phase 2 will begin from [Thursday] and we have established camps, one each at Landi Kotal and Nasir Bagh Road,” a senior official from Afghan Commissionerate in Peshawar told Dawn.

The two-day relaxation for Eid led to some confusion among official circles, with some sources suggesting that the deadline for repatriation had been extended.

The AFP news agency reported the deadline has been extended until the beginning of next week due to Eid holidays, while the Associated Press claimed that arrests and deportations had been paused until April 10.

Law enforcement sources in the twin cities also claimed that the deadline for Afghans’ repatriation had been quietly extended to April 10, and nothing was conveyed officially.

But an interior ministry official denied this claim, maintaining that there had been no extension.

UNHCR concerns

According to official statistics, a total of 69,494 families — including 473,397 individuals, of which 157,513 were men, 111,381 were women and 197,821 children — have been sent back to Afghanistan since September 2023.

UNHCR spokesperson Qaiser Khan Afridi told Dawn the UN agency was concerned regarding the government’s directive, as among the Afghan Citizen Cardholders, there might be individuals requiring international protection.

“In that light, we are urging the government [view] their situation through a humanitarian lens. We also call for engagement between Pakistan and Afghanistan so that the returns can be dignified and voluntary,” Mr Afridi told Dawn.

Meanwhile, Afghan Minister for Refugees and Reparation Mawlavi Abdul Kabir called for the humane treatment for refugees, especially in light of reports of mistreatment of Afghans by border nations, including instances where individuals holding legal visas were also deported.

In a statement, the interim Afghan government also reiterated its call for the voluntary return of Afghan migrants and urged Pakistan and Iran to stop forced deportations.

DAWN NEWS
 
Torkham witnesses largest deporation of Afghans since April 1

Saturday witnessed the largest deportation of Afghans via the Torkham border crossing here since April 1, with over 750 refugees, including men, women and children, being sent to their country after arrests in Islamabad and Punjab.

Officials at the transit centre in Landi Kotal told Dawn that 777 Afghan nationals were handed over to the Khyber police at the Karkhano Market checkpost.

They added that the refugees were first taken to the transit centre for registration at the Nadra desk and then shifted to the Torkham border for completion of deportation process.

The sources insisted that the registration of arrested Afghan nationals was just a formality and took little time to complete.

Official data revealed that the Afghans deported on Saturday were rounded up in Islamabad Capital Territory and Punjab’s Faisalabad, Rahimyar Khan, Hafizabad, Narowal, Sargodha, Multan, Sheikhupura and Bahawalpur areas.

Sargodha, Faisalabad and Islamabad top the list with 150, 143 and 129 detainees, respectively.

Police in Landi Kotal said all arrested refugees, including women and children, were escorted to the checkpost at Peshawar’s Karkhano Market by Punjab police before being in their custody.

They said that 85 per cent of Afghans were arrested in Punjab, while the rest opted for voluntary return.

Gul Agha, an Afghan family’s head, told reporters at Torkham that border authorities didn’t allow vehicles without temporary admission document (TAD) to cross the border and refugees were asked to either rent another vehicle with TAD for proceeding to Afghanistan or carry their goods to the border in handcarts.

He said that the restriction on non-TAD vehicles was not only a financial burden on most returning families but it had also multiplied their misery as they had to offload all their belongings from such vehicles before reloading them onto TAD vehicles or renting hand carts for transportation up to the border.

Sherin Jan, another returning Afghan refugee, said that he had paid Rs140,000 for a non-TAD vehicle in Punjab to take his goods to the Torkham border but had to pay additional Rs160,000 to another vehicle with valid documents for onward journey.

He said that the electronic scanning of his belongings and their checking by customs officials had added to his problems, as his family members had to wait for long hours to see “all those unnecessary formalities” completed.

The returning refugees requested Pakistani authorities to give a one-time waiver to non-TAD vehicles to facilitate their speedy return to Afghanistan, along with exemption from customs clearance and electronic scanning.

However, officials at the transit centre insisted that the number of returning Afghans had been increasing since their voluntary repatriation deadline expired on March 31, with the Punjab police intensifying their crackdown on illegal Afghan nationals in the province.

Also in the day, assistant commissioner of Landi Kotal ordered all Afghans, living in the tehsil, to vacate their houses and return to their country in line with the federal government’s announcement regarding expulsion of all illegal foreigners.

Meanwhile, customs authorities on Saturday said that 519 vehicles carried export items to Afghanistan in the last three days, while another 85 vehicles with Afghan Transit Trade goods were also dispatched.

However, local sources said that the last three days saw a marked decline in import of coal and soapstone from Afghanistan due to a technical fault in the scanning machine at the customs terminal.

They said that while Pakistani authorities had so far allowed 526 stranded empty vehicles to enter Pakistan in the last three days, only 300 vehicles, loaded mostly with pomegranate and raw cotton, were granted import permission.

The sources said that officials at the customs terminal argued that they couldn’t allow coal and soapstone vehicles to undergo electronic scanning as the scanner was being tested for proper functioning after it developed technical fault twice in the last three weeks, hampering imports from Afghanistan.

Meanwhile, the Kohat administration has asked 100,000 Afghan nationals, including illegal refugees and Afghan Citizen Card holders, to return to their country voluntarily.

Additional deputy commissioner (G) Hamid Iqbal, SP (City) Farooq Zaman and other officials met with Afghan elders from three Ghamkol Sharif refugee camps here on Saturday and said Pakistan had hosted refugees for 40 years but it was time for them to return on their own in line with a government decision.

According to official data, 100,000 Afghan refugees live in Kohat’s eight camps. Out of them, 16,000 got Afghan Citizen Cards from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in 2017.

The Ublan Camp is the largest camp, followed by three in Ghamkol and one each in Shindhand, Ghulam Banda, Cheechanna and Jarma Bridge, with their inhabitants doing business in both urban and rural areas.

Now, they all, totaling 100,000, will have to leave the country in line with the Pakistani government’s policy, according to officials.

The ADC said the government wanted refugees to go home respectfully and peacefully to start a new phase of their lives.

He said refugees should prepare themselves for voluntary repatriation to prevent any police action.

The ADC said authorities won’t use force to send refugees to Afghanistan and would facilitate their return.

“Afghan refugees should understand Pakistan’s economic and security compulsions under which they can’t be hosted any further, so they should opt for voluntary repatriation,” he said.

DAWN NEWS
 
Afghan citizens not resettled by April-end set to be deported

Thousands of Afghan refugees who are awaiting resettlement to Western countries will be deported from Pakistan if their host nations do not relocate them by April 30, a key government minister said on Thursday.

Amid calls for Pakistan to halt the deportation of Afghan nationals, State Minister for Interior Tallal Chaudhry also ruled out any extension in the deadline for the repatriation of Afghan Citizen Card (ACC) holders, which expired on March 31.

At a press conference, the minister revealed that as many as 857,157 undocumented foreign nationals had so far been sent back to their countries.

ACC holders had been asked to leave voluntarily by March 31, he said, adding that there would be no extension for them.

He also said that many individuals had been approved for resettlement by various third countries, but the process has been facing delays.

Mr Chaudhry said a uniform extension for such individuals was not possible, but individual cases based on ‘cogent reasoning’ could be considered by the government. He said a one-document regime would be fully implemented, requiring valid visas and passports to enter Pakistan.

He recalled that the policy of repatriating illegal foreign nationals had been in effect since October 2023 and listed its phases: in the first phase, undocumented foreigners without legal documents were sent back. In the second phase, the Afghan Citizen Card

holders are being repatriated, while in the third phase, those who have the Proof of Registration (PoR) cards will be deported.

He explained that the decision to expel these people was taken in light of current ground realities and security concerns. It had been observed that Afghan citizens were involved in narcotics trade and terrorism in Pakistan, he claimed.

Discussing arrangements to ensure the dignity of ACC holders, he claimed that all provinces, including Azad Kashmir and Gilgit-Baltistan, were fully on board with this initiative.

He said that 38 transit points have been established in Punjab, three in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, two in Sindh, three in Azad Kashmir, and one each in Balochistan, Islamabad, and Gilgit-Baltistan.

He said ACC holders were kept at these facilities before their onwards journey to Afghanistan, adding that they were being provided with shelter, food, medical care, and transport facilities.

Sharing the figure of the registered Afghan nationals, the minister said there were 815,247 Afghan Citizen Card holders, while 1,469,522 were registered under the PoR programme.

Answering a question, he said a mechanism was in place to track and deport Afghans who were neither registered with the UNHCR nor awaiting resettlement to a third country.

DAWN NEWS
 
Over 860,000 Afghans left Pakistan since Sept 2023

Over 860,000 Afghans have left Pakistan since September 2023, with more than half a million entering Afghanistan through border crossings in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, according to the government and UN data.

Pakistan has been carrying out phase-wise repatriation of Afghans living in the country.

During the first phase, which started in 2023, the government sent back Afghan nationals residing illegally in Pakistan.

In the second phase, which began earlier this year, registered Afghan refugees carrying the Afghan Citizen Cards (ACC) were asked to leave Pakistan by April 1.

According to the data released by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), from Sept 15, 2023, to April 5, 2025, 861,763 Afghans have returned to their country.

Official data showed 4,908 Afghan refugees left Pakistan on Friday.

Around 2,475 had ACC and were residing legally in Pakistan. Of them, some 2,125 left the country voluntarily, while 350 were deported through the Torkham border in KP.

As per the official data, apart from ACC holders, some 2,433 Afghan nationals, who had been residing illegally and without any documentation in Pakistan, also left on Friday.

Of them, 1,913 left voluntarily, while 520 were deported through Torkham border crossing.

Since the beginning of the second phase of repatriation of Afghan nationals on April 1, 16,242 ACC holders have left Pakistan. The data showed that 9,439 left voluntarily, while 6803 were deported.

Since September 2023, 500,040 Afghan nationals have left Pakistan through the two border crossings in KP.

The UNHCR and IOM estimated that from March 1 to April 5, an estimated 19,334 Afghans returned through the Torkham and Ghulam Khan crossings in KP and Chaman, Badini and Bahramcha crossings in Balochistan.

“From April onwards, a noticeable increase in returns and deportations was recorded, particularly on 4 and 5 April, where more than 2,000 returns were recorded on each day,” IOM noted.

According to officials, Afghan refugees were also transported from Punjab and Islamabad for deportation.

They were moved to two transit camps in Peshawar and Landi Kotal and went through a registration process before being sent back to Afghanistan.

DAWN NEWS
 
Pakistan urged to stop forced deportation of Afghans

Afghanistan has urged Pakistan to stop forced deportation of Afghan refugees living in Pakistan, says a statement issued by Afghan foreign ministry.

According to Bakhtar News Agency (BNA), Afghan Foreign Minister Mawlavi Amir Khan Muttaqi met Pakistan’s acting ambassador to Kabul, Obaidur Rehman Nizamani, to discuss key political and economic issues.

The statement said that Mr Muttaqi expressed concerns and disappointment over forced deportation of Afghan refugees and the mistreatment by certain Pakistani authorities, calling such behaviour provocative and harmful to bilateral relations. He urged for a change in the approach.

According to BNA, Mr Nizamani acknowledged the concerns and said that the issue would be shared with relevant authorities in Pakistan. Both sides also emphasised the importance of taking mutually constructive steps and encouraged high-level visits and dialogue to strengthen ties.

More than five million Afghan refugees, both residing legally and illegally in Pakistan, have left the country since September 2023, according to official documents.

The document, a copy of which is available with Dawn, said that 1,358 Afghan nationals carrying Afghan Citizen Card and residing legally in Pakistan left for Afghanistan on Sunday. It said that of 1,358 Afghan nationals, 1,255 left the country voluntarily while 103 were deported.

The document also said that 1,976 Afghan nationals, who had been living in Pakistan without any documents, also left for Afghanistan on Sunday. It added that of 1,976, some 1,778 Afghan nationals left voluntarily while 198 were deported.

It said that a total of 19,058 ACC holders left Pakistan since April 1, when the second phase of reparation of Afghan nationals began after expiry of the deadline on March 31. It said that 11,939 ACC holders left voluntarily while 7,116 were deported.

The document said that so far, 504,681 Afghan nationals left for Afghanistan since September 2023, when the first phase for their repatriation was started. Of them 488,164 left voluntarily and 16,517 were deported.

Meanwhile, the director general of Rescue 1122, Shah Fahad visited Landi Kotal holding centre on Monday. He was briefed on the 1122 Rescue camp at the holding area, said a statement.

The district emergency officer, Engineer Shariq Riaz Khattak, informed the director general that 89 rescue services were provided to Afghan refugees including first aid and shifting the injured Afghan nationals to hospitals for further treatment besides provision of services to an Afghan woman, who gave birth to a baby girl.

“Rescue 1122 is performing as first responder during emergencies and government is providing all the resources to the department,” the statement quoted the director general Rescue 1122 as saying on the occasion.

DAWN NEWS
 
Over 1,000 Afghan nationals brought to refugee camp at Rawalpindi’s Golra Mor, say police

As many as 1,040 Afghan nationals were brought to the Afghan refugee camp at Golra Mor on Tuesday, but 15 of them managed to escape.

Of the total number of Afghan Citizen Card (ACC) holders brought to the Afghan refugee holding centre, 964, including 199 females and 253 children, were deported back to their home country, sources said.

Following the government’s directives, the police continued their crackdown against Afghan nationals, they said.

On the other hand, Rawalpindi City Police Officer (CPO) Syed Khalid Hamdani directed the SPs of Rawal, Potohar and Saddar divisions to compile details of ACC holders who live in Rawalpindi district and who have either been relocated to the Afghan refugee camp or have voluntarily left for Afghanistan.

The CPO, in his directive to SPs, said that he had already ordered them to provide the list of 7,912 ACC holders so they could be detained and shifted to the Afghan refugees’ detention centre at Golra Mor for repatriation.

According to sources, the SPs had been asked to direct all the station house officers (SHOs) to ensure checking of Afghan nationals with ACCs and those who had still not been detained and shifted to the refugee camp.

The CPO also sought the details of the houses, with photographs, where they had been residing and an affidavit from the owners of those houses. All the details of ACC holders must be sent to the foreign branch of the CPO office on Tuesday, the sources said.

The government had officially set a deadline of March 31 for ACC holders to leave Pakistan voluntarily. However, the process of detaining Afghan nationals who do not have documentation and are residing in Rawalpindi and Islamabad is still underway.

On Tuesday, as many as 1,040 Afghan nationals, including 588 males, 100 females, and 253 children, were brought to the Afghan refugee camp near Golra Mor.

Of the total number of ACC holders, 964, including 550 males, 180 females, and 234 children, were deported back to Afghanistan. Fifteen individuals managed to escape.

The CPO expressed concern over the ‘disappointing’ performance of SHOs of all police stations regarding the detention of illegal Afghan nationals and directed them to report to him every four hours on progress in detaining illegal Afghans and shifting them to the camp.

The CPO also directed that SHOs whose performance was unsatisfactory must appear before him on Saturday to explain the reasons.

He categorised the Afghan nationals to be detained as ACC card holders, visa overstays and those having no legal proof of stay. However, the police have been directed not to detain Afghans holding Proof of Registration (PoR) cards.

The district police had already chalked out a security plan for the Golra Mor camp. A team of police officials headed by an SP has been deployed around the detention centre to ensure security. The road passing in front of the detention centre has been declared a highly sensitive area.

As part of the move against illegal foreigners, including Afghan nationals, the intelligence agencies have been monitoring the implementation of the repatriation plan of Afghan nationals.

DAWN NEWS
 
Islamabad says more than 100,000 Afghans left Pakistan in April

More than 100,000 Afghans have left Pakistan in the past three weeks, the interior ministry said Tuesday, after Islamabad announced the widespread cancellation of residence permits, reported AFP.

Pakistan has recently witnessed hundreds of Afghans dragging their belongings across the Torkham and Chaman borders as the government began its second drive of deportations on March 31, which targeted those holding Afghan Citizen Cards — an identity document jointly issued by the Pakistani and Afghan governments in 2017.

The drive is part of a larger campaign that the government began in 2023 to repatriate all illegal foreigners. Under the first phase, all undocumented Afghans were deported, those who didn’t have identity proof.

Analysts say the expulsions are designed to pressure neighbouring Afghanistan’s Taliban authorities, which Islamabad blames for fuelling a rise in border attacks.

The interior ministry told AFP that “100,529 Afghans have left in April”.

Convoys of Afghan families have been heading to the border since the start of April when the deadline to leave expired, crossing into a country mired in a humanitarian crisis.

“I was born in Pakistan and have never been to Afghanistan,” 27-year-old Allah Rahman told AFP at the Torkham border on Saturday.

“I was afraid the police might humiliate me and my family. Now we’re heading back to Afghanistan out of sheer helplessness.”

Afghanistan’s prime minister Hasan Akhund on Saturday condemned the “unilateral measures” taken by its neighbour after Pakistan’s foreign minister Ishaq Dar flew to Kabul for a day-long visit to discuss the returns.

Akhund urged the Pakistani government to “facilitate the dignified return of Afghan refugees”.

Many Afghan’s are leaving voluntarily, choosing to depart instead of facing deportation, but the UN refugee agency UNHCR said that in April alone, more arrests and detentions took place in Pakistan — 12,948 — than in all of last year.

Children deported

Pakistan’s security forces are under enormous pressure along the border with Afghanistan as they battle a growing insurgency by ethnic nationalists in Balochistan, and the Pakistani Taliban and its affiliates in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

Last year was the deadliest in Pakistan in a decade.

The government has frequently said that Afghan nationals take part in attacks and blames Kabul for allowing militants to take refuge on its soil, a charge Taliban leaders deny.

Millions of Afghans have poured into Pakistan over the past several decades fleeing successive wars, as well as hundreds of thousands since the return of the Taliban government in 2021.

Some Pakistanis have grown weary of hosting a large Afghan population as security and economic woes deepen, and the deportation campaign has widespread support.

“They came here for refuge but ended up taking jobs, opening businesses. They took jobs from Pakistanis who are already struggling,” 41-year-old hairdresser Tanveer Ahmad told AFP as he gave a customer a shave.

More than half of Afghans being deported were children, the UNHCR said on Friday.

The women and girls among those crossing were entering a country where they are banned from education beyond secondary school and barred from many sectors of work.

In the first phase of returns in 2023, hundreds of thousands of undocumented Afghans were forced across the border in the space of a few weeks.

In the second phase announced in March, the Pakistan government cancelled the residence permits of more than 800,000 Afghans and warned thousands more awaiting relocation to other countries to leave by the end of April.

“Afghans take on jobs Pakistanis consider shameful, like collecting garbage,” a shopkeeper told AFP on the condition of anonymity. “Who will do that after they’re gone? “

DAWN NEWS
 
Absolutely smashed it

Well done pmln

It's taken nearly 50 yrs to sort this massive security issue with this enemy nation.

I'm glad pmln and army are not backing down

They can't backdown from canal project vast swathes of west punjab and south punjab need irrigating for coperate farming modernisation of agriculture and food and water security due to Indian dams the threats in sindh must not be entertained whose now playing regional and ethnic politics for their own failures that have turned rural sindh worse than a sub saharan african state where people are enslaved by waderas. They just let the water and pollution run into the river sea , have done nothing about water management did nothing about the famine in thar and the aids hiv outbreak caused by their doctor who infected the whole children in the village .

Hopefully army does operation in this area clears south punjab and northern sind of these dakoos.
 
3 million Afghans could return this year: UN

Some three million Afghans could return to their country this year, a UN refugee official said on Friday, warning that the repatriation flow is placing intense pressure on an already major humanitarian crisis.

Iran and Pakistan have introduced new policies affecting displaced Afghans, with Tehran already having given 4m “illegal” Afghans until July 6 to leave Iranian territory.

“What we are seeing is the undignified, disorganised and massive exodus of Afghans from both countries, which is generating enormous pressures on the homeland that is willing to receive them and yet utterly unprepared to do so,” United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) representative in Afghanistan Arafat Jamal said during a video press conference from Kabul.

“Of concern to us is this scale, the intensity and the manner in which returns are occurring.”

Over 1.6m Afghans have already returned from Pakistan and Iran this year, the large majority from Iran, Jamal added. The figure already exceeds the UNHCR’s initial forecasts of 1.4m for 2025.

The office of the High Commissioner now estimates 3m coming into Afghanistan this year, Jamal said.

The UN agency said over 30,000 people per day have streamed across the Islam Qala border into Afghanistan, with 50,000 crossing on July 4 alone.

“Many of these returnees are arriving having been abruptly uprooted and having undergone an arduous, exhausting and degrading journey. They arrive tired, disoriented, brutalised and often in despair,” Jamal said.

The United Nations has taken emergency measures to reinforce water and sanitation systems intended to serve 7,000 to 10,000 people per day, as well as vaccinations and nutrition services.

Many who have crossed the border have reported pressure from Iranian authorities, including arrests and expulsions.


 
Excellent news

Even iran has start imprisoning them for making drones In secret factories and spying for mossad.

Iran plans to kick 4 million out .


Remember who advocates their stay In pakistan .

Now what is needed is a Turkish style concrete wall on n waziristan , s waziristan and kurram border with afghanistan since this area along with bajaur are the hot sectors for what is lar aw bar ethnofascism daily infiltration, daily attacks om military and civilian population and a base to infiltrate other parts of the mir jafar governed kpk whose cm is drunk warlord thug . With the wall it will be more or less imperentable army can move in and police the area and give swift justice to the khwarij or any of the local people renting them a bed and daughter .
 
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